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...been working around the clock for weeks now, putting out fire after fire. Besides having to comprehend and solve the mind-bending financial woes of some of the world's biggest companies, they are also briefing and seeking counsel from CEOs of the surviving companies, never mind President George W. Bush and the two presidential candidates, plus central bankers from around the globe...
...Paulson was nominated by President George W. Bush to assume the secretary's post in 2006 and unanimously confirmed by the U.S. Senate, replacing John Snow. Previously he had served as Chairman and CEO of investment banking giant Goldman Sachs from 1999 to 2006, during which he led the firm through a period of whopping growth. He embraced risk, taking on debt and betting big when the odds dictated it. Now he is charged with cleaning up the sizable mess left by an epidemic of risk-taking run amok...
...Leone said. “They know to be composed, to believe that they can do it, and they did that. It was an end-to-end game, an exhausting game, so I’m very proud of them.” —Staff writer Emily W. Cunningham can be reached at ecunning@fas.harvard.edu...
...kind of hungry so I stopped by to get food, but I saw lots of my friends who definitely aren’t freshmen or sophomores,” said Christine W...
...Their profiles change from campaign to campaign, but women like Stern and Seidel have been deciding U.S. elections for years. In 1996 they were the "soccer moms" Bill Clinton captured to win re-election. After 9/11, they morphed into the "security moms" who helped give George W. Bush a second term. Four years later, they are a little older, and their anxieties have multiplied. Their numbers are enormous: they typically account for as much as 12% of the electorate. The two campaigns are referring to them as Wal-Mart moms, but a better name might be maxed-out moms...